• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: Cheverels Care Home with Nursing

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

52 Dorchester Road, Maiden Newton, Dorset, DT2 0BE (01300) 320348

Provided and run by:
Altogether Care LLP

All Inspections

24 April 2015

During a routine inspection

Cheverels Care Home with Nursing was last inspected on 21 November 2013. The home was found not to be meeting all requirements in the areas inspected. We told the provider that improvements were required in the training provided to staff, the standard of record keeping and the systems in place to protect people against the risk of inappropriate or unsafe care and treatment. The provider wrote to us and told us the necessary improvements would be completed by 12 February 2014. We found the necessary improvements had been made.

When we visited there was no registered manager in post. The last manager left the service in February 2014. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service. Like registered providers, they are ‘registered persons’. Registered persons have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.

Cheverels Care Home with Nursing provides care and support for up to 16 older people. At the time of the inspection there were nine people living at the home.

The provider had systems in place to ensure the quality of the service was regularly reviewed and improvements were made. This meant that the care and support people received were regularly audited and areas for improvement recognised. The staff knew people’s needs well and the records relating to people’s care and support were up to date.

People could not fully tell us about how they experienced the support on offer but one person told us it was “nice here”. Relatives told us about how the staff looked after people and that people were treated with a great deal of kindness. They told us they considered people were safe living at Cheverals. We observed this to be the case.

Staff knew people’s routines and respected them. People’s care records confirmed what staff had told us about people’s preferred lifestyle. We observed that staff knew how to support people when they became anxious and had effective ways of supporting them.

The provider was meeting the requirements of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and assessments of people’s capacity had consistently been made. The staff at the home understood some of the concepts of the Act, such as people’s rights to make decisions for themselves.

The staff demonstrated a caring and compassionate approach to people living at the home. The atmosphere at the home was relaxed and staff and people living at the home appeared comfortable in each other’s company. People were offered choices at mealtimes such as where to sit and what to eat and the size of portion. This helped ensure people enjoyed their food and mealtimes were a pleasant experience

Relatives told us there were enough staff to meet people’s needs. The provider was able to demonstrate that additional staff were available to support people should their needs change or if extra support was required. There were activities provided and a weekly bus trip to local attractions

The staff told us they worked well as a team and enjoyed working at the home. They told us there was enough flexibility within their working hours to sit and talk with people and to do things that they knew interested them.

21 November 2013

During a routine inspection

We were unable to speak with people due their health condition as most people living in the home had dementia. We spoke with the acting manager, care staff and one person's relative who was visiting on the day. They told us that staff provided the care and support they needed.

Most of the people who lived in the home had been assessed as not having capacity to make choices and decisions which affected their lives.

We found that people were unable tell us if they were comfortable and looked after well.

We observed that people's privacy, dignity and independence were respected.

We observed that people were treated with respect and kindness when interacting with staff.

We found care and treatment was not planned and delivered in a way that was intended to ensure people's safety and welfare.

We found staff had completed safeguarding training and the home had an up to date safeguarding adults policy and processes that were accessible to staff.

We saw evidence that people's relatives had been involved in developing people's care and support plans.

We found the acting manager did not have systems in place to assess and monitor the quality of services.

24 January 2013

During an inspection in response to concerns

A high proportion of people living at Cheverals Care and Nursing home could not express their views. We used the SOFI (Short Observational Framework for Inspection) tool to help us see what people's experiences were. The SOFI tool allows us to spend time watching what is going on in a service and helps us to record how people spend their time and whether they have positive experiences. This includes looking at the support that is given to them by the staff.

We observed that people were treated with respect and dignity. They were offered choice with regards to their diet and how they choose to spend their day. Staff supported people in a caring and empathetic manner.

A relative told us that staff understand people's needs and ensure that families are encouraged to be involved in decisions made about their relatives. One person who lived at the home told us they had been included in the arrangements to move into the home and felt their needs were being met.

The provider did not have an effective quality assurance process which is required to monitor and improve the service offered at Cheverals.

5 April 2011

During a routine inspection

We were not always able to get direct comments from most people living in the home because people with dementia are not always able to tell us about their experiences. One person was able to tell us that they liked their room, the food and living at the home.

We were able to observe how people experienced care and saw that staff were respectful and considerate and tried to take account of individual preferences. We observed that staff sat at table with people in the dining room at mealtime, interacting with them whilst prompting and assisting with eating and drinking.

Visiting relatives and a GP told us that they were all pleased with the service the home provided. One visitor told us that, in his experience, staff try to take account of the needs of each individual in the home. We saw that staff actively involve relatives in the assessment and review of the care needs of people.